So, most commercial almond orchards actually ship in bees from beekeepers to pollinate them every year, and as you might assume, the bees aren’t having a good time. Having their hives transported long distances is extremely stressful for them (notably, bees won’t poop inside their hive, and having to hold it in for hours cause severe health issues) the fact that they’re pollinating a monoculture is detrimental to their overall health, and these intense pollination sessions drastically reduce the lifespans of the worker bees.

Actually, this isn’t just for almonds, though that’s the most infamous. Plenty of crops rely on this practice.

What are your thoughts? Are these plant-based foods not vegan because animals were exploited in their production? How, if at all, would your thoughts differ for an orchard that had local bees on site instead of shipping bees in? I don’t think any large scale orchard relies on wild bees, so that’s probably not applicable unless you’re buying super local, like, your friend who has an almond tree in their back yard local.

  • maxmoon
    link
    22 years ago

    I am more concerned about the carbon footprint (especially water usage), that’s why I am avoiding them and avocados as much as I can.

    … and stuff like coffee, which doesn’t bring you any nutrition, but the production only destroys rain forests and not even thinking about the billions of disposal cups, which gets thrown away every day.